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Why is Money That Grows Inside an Insurance Policy Tax-Free? - YouTube
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IUL is a sacred tax-free cash cow. In
this episode, we are going to address the
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question, "Why is money that grows in an
insurance policy tax-free?" You're going to
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learn why in this episode. This is
episode 3 out of the 21 in a series
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titled Secrets To A Tax-Free Retirement.
This entire series would be an
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investment of about 4 hours of your
time that could make you an extra
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million bucks that will generate
$100,000 a year of tax-free income for
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as long as you live. Is that worth it?
Here we go.
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So, my name is Doug Andrew and I've been
doing this for more than 45 years. What's
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THIS?
Helping people accumulate their money
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tax-free then accessing their money
tax-free during retirement or maybe even
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before retirement. For their business or
any other type of purpose. And then when
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they ultimately pass away, it blossoms. It
increases in value and transfers income
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tax free. Now, in the previous episode, I
explained that there's only one vehicle
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in the Internal Revenue Code that allows
you to do that. And that is a maximum
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funded tax advantaged insurance contract.
So many times, people say, "Well, why is it
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tax-free?" Okay, let's reason together here.
For a long time, people have been able to
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insure themselves in the event that they
maybe had an untimely death. If I'm a 30-
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year-old father and I have some young
children and I want to make sure that if
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I died in an accident or maybe even an
illness as unlikely as that may be for a
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30-year-old, if I want to be responsible
and accountable, I insure myself. Now, the
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insurance industry will actually allow
you to get about 30 times your income if
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you're insuring yourself and you would
create that type of an economic loss
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when you are like in your 30's. And so, if
I was making $100,000 a year, I could
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qualify for up to 3 million dollars of
life insurance. Which would then give my
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Widow my orphans if I left them behind,
their money to be able to have their
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education their music lessons and my
wife to live in dignity. And that's being
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responsible and accountable. So, what I'm
doing is I'm taking pressure off of the
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government to take care of those that I
would leave behind if I passed away. And
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so the government says, "If you're going to
do that to take pressure off of us
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having to provide welfare
or support for those you leave behind,
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why would we tax you for doing that? Why
would we penalize you or take a piece of
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that?" And so, it's been a sacred cow in
the Internal Revenue Code, life insurance
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is tax-free. As the money inside the
insurance policy grows, it's tax-free.
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When you take money out, if you do it the
right way, it's tax-free. And when you
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ultimately pass away, it blossoms
increases in value. Meaning, if I put in
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500,000 and died the next
day I left behind a million two hundred
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and fifty thousand. That is totally
income tax-free so that my beneficiaries
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would be able to have the wherewithal to
live and sustain themselves without
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being a drain on society. That's why it's
a sacred tax-free cash cow. So, whether
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you use a life insurance for a death
benefit or a living benefit. If you're
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going to maximum fund it and universal
life was designed for living benefits,
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primarily, that means that you are using
the money to be financially independent
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to have tax-free income and not rely so
much on Social Security or government
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programs. This is a tax advantage just
like people who put money into tax-
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deferred IRAs and 401Ks. The difference
is this stays tax-free because you're
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going to leave it behind to those you
care about and provide the wherewithal
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so that they can be financially
independent.
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So, this has been around for more than a
hundred years when the Internal Revenue
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Code that as we know it now came about.
This is provided under three sections of
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the Internal Revenue Code.
So, when EF Hutton, the brainchild behind
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the emergence of universal life first
came up with the idea, they were looking
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first and foremost at section 101 A. This
is what provides a tax-free death
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benefit. But see, you are self insuring.
You're putting in a whole bunch of money
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to self-insure. If I wanted to put in
$500,000 which is
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just an example, I am self ensuring that
if I died, I would leave behind $500,000
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and it's tax-free under Section 101A
because you are self-insuring. This is
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provided under the Internal Revenue Code
so that you are being responsible and
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accountable so that you do not have to
pay for insurance from an insurance
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company who assumes the risk. You can do
that if you want. Now, I will share in the
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next episode how you have to comply with
certain guidelines. But this was the
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first idea. This is self insurance. Now,
money inside of an insurance policy will
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earn interest or dividends. It will grow
and it is a tax-free as it grows. It
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accumulates tax-free and that's provided
under Section 72E. So, if I put in a
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$100,000 or 10,000
a year or 100 bucks a month or
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500,000 or a million, we
have people putting in 10,000,000,
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whatever you put into the max-funded
insurance contract accumulates with
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interest
totally tax-free. Now, I have averaged
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returns between 7 and 10 percent. In
fact, before indexed universal life came
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out, I have reached 8.2 percent as soon
as indexing came out in 1997. Which I
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addressed in another episode in this
series.
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My rate of return went up to an average
of 10.07% and I'll
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explain why. So, I'm earning that money
tax-free. At 7.2%,
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under the rule of 72, your money will
double every 10 years. So, if I put in a
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half a million, it doubles to a million
in 10 years. In another 10 years, it
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doubles to 2 million and then four
million then eight million. Do you know
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that we have had many many people who
started out with 500,000?
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And it doubled to a million to 2
million to 4 million to 8 million?
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And now that 8 million thirty years
later is generating at a 10%
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payout. 800,000 a year of
tax-free income. As long as they live. Now,
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that is afforded under maximum-funded
insurance contracts.
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That's because 72E of the internal
new code allowed that money to
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accumulate tax-free.
Now, another section of the code 7702
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shows you how you can access your money
totally income tax-free. And there are
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3 different ways that you can access
money that I address in another episode.
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But the beauty behind a maximum funded
indexed universal life insurance
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contract is it passes the liquidity and
safety and rate of return tests with
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flying colors and it's tax-free to boot.
So, when this first came out, you're going to
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learn in the next few episodes that this
was incredible. I saw it immediately but
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the IRS came in and said "Wait a minute
here. We think here maybe abusing. You're
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stepping over the bounds of tax-free
insurance." And Hutton said, "No, we're not.
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We're in compliance." And of course the
IRS is think of "Well, who pays a half a
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million dollars cash in premiums for a
half a million dollars of death benefit?"
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"Well, our clients do because they're
self-insuring and it's tax-free." So, they
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came in and they convinced congress to
pass some additional tax citations. But
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the message in this episode is that the
money inside of the insurance policy is
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tax-free as long as it stays under the
definition, the umbrella of sections 72E
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7702 and 101A of the Internal Revenue
Code because that has been grandfathered.
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That's a sacred tax-free cash cow for
over a century because it's an insurance
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contract. It's an insurance policy. If you
move it over to a different section of
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the code as an investment, investments
are taxable sooner or later. And also
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most investments are subject to
volatility. I don't want to pay tax on
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that. I do not want to subject myself to
market volatility so I take particular
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care and making sure my money stays
protected under those 3 sections of
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the code. And it stays tax-free. So, in the
next episode, you're going to begin
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to learn how you can keep protected
under those 3 sections of the code
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by adhering to three tax citations that
were passed back in the 1980s. But this
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is an incredible tax-free cash cow.
So, I always tell my audiences and in my
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book number 11, The Laser Fund, you'll see
this statement and disclaimer. Life
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insurance policies are not investments.
And accordingly should not be purchased
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as an investment. I'm okay with that, why?
Because I don't want an investment.
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Because they define investment as being
taxable sooner or later and probably
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you're going to have some market volatility.
I don't want that. It's tax-free
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insurance under those three sections of
the code. So, I would implore you to
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continue to watch other episodes in this
series. Watch this one next if you can.
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And also, if you want to learn get a free
copy of this book, claim your copy by
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going to laserfund.com
I'll pay for the book. It's 300 pages of
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charts, graphs, explanations. 62 actual
clients stories. You just pay
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$5.95 shipping and handling and I'll fire
out a copy of this to you so that you
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can study and learn and see actual
charts and graphs. How incredible this is.
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